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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  May 7, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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bobcat in colorado found stuck in a soccer net. sharing these photos which show the animal suspended in the air. he is okay. rob: cool cat. man he got stuck. jillian: hope you have a good day. rob: see you tomorrow. ♪ stay a minute ♪ the clock is ticking ♪ so stay ♪ all you have to do is stay. steve: the clock is ticking it's exactly 6:00 in new york city and welcome aboard, folks. it's the tuesday "fox & friends." brian: i got a little bit of these problems. i have one of these ties if i don't tie it exactly right the lower part goes past the other part. at some point. ainsley: what makes that different. brian: made by the person on the loom.
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steve: somehow that worked out. brian: it's not sloppy. ainsley: good combo. steve: any nasa scientists who can explain to brian why that tie the tail is longer than the main part, please email us kilmeade at friends@foxnews.com. brian: spacex private public partnership. i will say this back to clip ons starting tomorrow. ainsley: please no. steve: when you last time you saw someone sell those. brian: bartenders do it because you don't want to get choked to death by angry patron. steve: do you see them in the store. brian: not as much but i don't shop like i used to. ainsley: those are made for 7 and 8-year-olds. steve: busy tuesday. go from new york to washington and the battle on capitol hill over the russia probe is intensifying.
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republicans are demanding a new investigation into media leaks. brian: the democrats are ramping up their fight against attorney general william barr. ainsley: griff jenkins is live in our nation's capital where things are heating up. republicans upset about the leaks. democrats upset about the mueller report and not seeing the full version, right? griff: that's right ainsley brian and steve good morning. both sides are heating up behind me. ron johnson and chuck grassley calling on the inspector general of the intelligence community to investigate media leaks from the community in the early portion of the russia probe. point specifically to texts and emails from former fbi agent peter strzok this one in december 2016 to lawyer lisa page. think our sisters have begun leaking like mad. scorned and worried and political, they're kicking in to overdrive. i'm beginning to think the agency got a lot of info a lot earlier than we thought and hasn't shared it completely with us.
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might explain all these weird seemingly incorrect leads all these media folks have would also highlight agency as a source of some of the leaks. johnson wanted to know more about who sisters were and what agency he is talking about had this to say. >> there was no collusion and yet agencies of the federal government were leaking stories and creating this huge story. >> meanwhile on the house side. one day before house judiciary committee chairman jerry nadler plans to hold attorney general barr in contempt of congress for not turning over unredacted copy of the mueller report. the justice department agreed to meet today with committee staff. nadler says my hope we make concrete progress at today's meeting towards resolving this dispute. the committee remains committed to fighting reasonable accommodation. in response doj assistant attorney general steven boyd writing this: the committee has not articulated any legitimate basis for requesting law enforcement documents bear on two dozen criminal cases and
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investigations including ongoing matters. you remember the doj says they cannot turn over that unredacted copy because it would break the law. we will see what today's meeting produces. guys? steve: all right. griff, thank you very much. griff has two things in that report. let's start with the strzok and page text messages and also the email that he sent out to his colleagues at the fbi. do you know it's really interesting so ron johnson and charles grassley are saying to the inspector general the intel community hey we know you are looking into the fisa abuse are you looking into the leaks? and if you are not looking into the leaks please explain why. he laid out exactly what some of these telltale hints are, for instance, in the strzok email he talks about the agency. he is referring to the cia. and he was also talking about an april 2017 guardian story titled british spies were first to spot trump's teams links to russia. he sights a court slow a sourceo
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the intelligence. cia. cia in both those. who ran the cia back then? john brennan. ainsley: senator johnson and senator grassley, that's what they are asking the inspector general. they are saying who are these sister organizations? is it the cia? is it the intelligence community run by james clapper at the time president obama was in office? and these emails and these text messages was released in deals of 2016. brian: amazingly it did start with the british judge napolitano said the british are all over this and got rebuked by the country and number two is leaking to the press. this story goes exactly with strzok talking to page nbc breaking a story vladimir putin personally involved in the u.s.s. election hacks. senior u.s. intelligence officials official fbi is speculating about this
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story. here is mollie hemingway last night with tucker on what this means. it is something they are not prepared psychologically to accept at this point. that's why you are seeing people react so strongly. a year ago we were told any critique on robert mueller was a attack on the public. couldn't have rule of law. if we even rit sized any way robert mueller? what's going on then with this extreme criticism of william barr? simply for saying he would like to make sure that our federal agencies that are tasked with law enforcement and intelligence-gathering were following protocol. steve: okay. that's what it's all about. she is talking about how the democrats cannot accept the fact that the mueller report is out there. and they found no collusion. nonetheless, there will be -- sounds like, according to jerry nadler a vote tomorrow on whether or not to cite a resolution of contempt in the congress against the attorney general unless they release the
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unredacted version. apparently at the staff level today they will get together and figure out if there is another way some sort of accommodation. ainsley: if they release the complete fully unredacted. steve: by law they can't. ainsley: it would be illegal. because it would release the names and individuals that were being investigated were innocent. brian: nonstory only 6 to 8% of the whole thing is redacted. what they want is attorney general barr to extend this story and on the 15th they might have robert mueller to further extend this story while the inspector general pursues that angle on how this whole thing got started. mean while what do you do if you are in a race for one position and 22 other people want it? you come out with outstanding things that would stand out above the crowd in terms of policy will if you are kamala harris, you blow up tax reform, which helped fuel the economy like which we have not seen. if you are pete buttigieg you come up with something else. here's an example of what they were doing on the stump yesterday. >> i am proposing that we
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change the tax code as follows: that will benefit the members of almost everybody who is represented here. i will tell you how we're going to pay for it on day one we are going to repeal that tax bill that benefited the top 1% and the biggest corporations. >> our current president targeted with a message saying that we could find greatness by just stopping the clock and turning it back. and making america great again. when that past that he is promising to return us to was never as great as advertised. brian: really? steve: there you have some of the things being said out on the campaign trail. there was a brand new hill harris poll that came out and it showed that joe biden is so in the lead right now. he is at 46%. bernie is at 14%. in other words, joe biden is 32% in front of bernie and
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followed by pete buttigieg at 8 pes everybody else at 7. brian: joe biden channeled margaret thatcher to find out what she thought about president trump which i think is interesting. steve: why because she died like five years ago? brian: joe biden said she complained to him about president trump. she got him confused with theresa may. the other thing to keep in mind, too. this is the same lead that hillary clinton had early on and we will see what happens when it goes state by state. when it came to iowa she won by millimeters. steve: it's early. ainsley: all making promises when you have seventh grade promise longer recess. steve: candy. ainsley: candy every day. brian: nice to know mayor
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pete wants to run a country that was never that great. good luck with that. steve: jillian mele has been in like 25 different time zones. ainsley: you were in europe with your family and california for a wedding? >> you are a good friend. jillian: thank you. good to be back with you guys. i missed work. let's start with this fox news alert now because we do have some serious issues to get to and really sick sight. look at this. a suspected cop killer seen smiling after his arrest in mississippi overnight. 19-year-old darian attkisson accused of gunning down the veteran standing outside police headquarters when he was ambushed. >> now we will grieve for the family and will they will know here shortly that he has been arrested and maybe that will give them some relief. mckeithen was planning to retire at the end of the
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year. he leaves behind a wife and four kids. he is the 16th officer shot in the line of duty this year. also breaking right now. a planned meeting between secretary of state mike pompeo and german chancellor angela merkel just cancelled. pompeo was set to meet with merkel today in berlin. the state department says the meeting has to be rescheduled because of, quote, pressing issues. did not elaborate. we do not know where is he headed now. pompeo has been taking part in a meeting of the artic counsel still in finland. overnight president trump pardons army lieutenant convicted of murdering a suspected terrorist in iraq. army first lieutenant michael behenna says he shot and killed the prisoner in self-defense in 2008. al qaeda operative was being questioned in connection with a roadside bombs that killed two soldiers. prosecutors argued he opened fire on purpose. he was released on parole in 2014. social media going wild over the newest addition to the royal family. the duchess of sussex meghan
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and prince harry announcing the birth of their son but not revealing his name just yet. top name circling online for baby sussex are arthur, alexander and albert. baby sussex is seventh to the throne. it was so cute when prince harry came out and did that attle announcement. ainsley: it was the best thing. so cool. what do you want the name to be. jillian: i don't know. whatever they pick it will be perfect. ainsley: probably beauregard. steve: i suggest stuart. ainsley: why? steve: socialist bernie sanders cannot define socialism. >> republicans want to run against socialism. is it time for you to disavow that label. >> the problem is and on a television interview it's hard for me to describe in-depth what we mean by that. brian: he would much rather do it in book form. stuart varney know what is he means. he has a message for bernie
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this and even this.hark, i deep clean messes like this. but i don't have to clean this, because the self-cleaning brush roll removes hair, while i clean. - [announcer] shark, the vacuum that deep cleans, now cleans itself. steve: the trump administration is accusing the country of china of breaking their promises during trade talks and now plan on raising tariffs over $200 billion on chinese imports from 10 to 25% effective friday at midnight. brian: unless some deal can
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get done. joining us with more is the host of varney and company on fox business network 9 to noon also the same guy who does my take with varney the app. everybody should get on fox nation. the president said on sunday i don't know if i'm going to go through this trade deal and lighthizer says they are reneging on everything they have agreed on. steve: the chinese. brian: the chinese are. i don't know where we go from here. >> it's a face-to-face standoff their vice premier is coming to america. steve: good. >> will be here this week. it's a direct face-off face to face on the issue of tariffs and trade. got it the president is playing a very strong hand here. not a weak hand. a strong hand. number one, we have got political unity behind these tariffs, behind the strongs stand. you see what senator schumer said hang in there, mr. president, i'm with you. our allies the europeans very much in favor of a strong stand with china. and these tariffs would hurt them far more than they hurt us. so the president has a very
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strong hand to play and i don't think he is going to back down or blink at all. ainsley: he explains why he is doing it he tweeted he said the united states has been losing for many years. $680 billion a year on trade. with china we lose $500 billion. sorry, we're not going to be doing that anymore. 25% seems fair now, right? >> there is all kinds of issues involved here. there had been 150 page detailed agreement, the chinese wanted to go back into that agreement and renegotiate parts of it. mr. trump and our trade team said no. we're not going to do that. we're putting tariffs on you on friday holding very, very firm. i think those tariffs will be imposed. brian: don't you like the way the market came back? >> yes, it did. down 500 points yesterday. 71 low on the dow industrials came all the way back to almost break even. we have a very resilient market in the fails of this trade war threat. steve: it would hurt china much more than the united states. >> no question. steve: meanwhile we are
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capitalistic some folks who wants to be president talk about the wonders of socialism. bernie sanders was asked about that. listen to, this stuart. >> okay. >> trump seems to want to run against you. and certainly he wants to run and republicans want to run against socialism. >> okay. >> is it time for you to disavow that label? >> the problem is and on a television interview it's hard for me to describe in-depth what we mean by that. >> he won't go away from it. steve: if he can't describe it, can you? >> yes. how much time you got? okay. number one. steve: 45 seconds. >> socialism means high taxes for everyone. socialism means the confiscation of wealth. have you listenerred to senator elizabeth warren we will take it off you. not tax, we will take your wealth. socialism means control of healthcare, medicare for all, no private insurance. steve: you are making the points why bernie didn't want to say these things on tv. control of education, control of the banks, control of businesses. government control of everything. collective control of our
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society as oppose you had so what we have got capitalism. individual liberty and freedom. ainsley: i have heard it described as stealing. you make the money and i will steal it from you. >> i would describe it exactly so. senator warren wants to take 2% of your wealth over a certain level. you built it up. steve: super wealth. >> you built it up all your life. take 2% per year right off you. skim it off the top. it's not a tax it's confiscation. that's socialism. see me get worked up here. brian: amazing to try to see a anchor push bernie sanders. i want to you win bernie. give up socialism. ainsley: please give it up. brian: unbelievable. >> stop it, bernie, you are losing. ainsley: win bernie. brian: are you going to wear the same suit later. >> probably. >> steve: brian, that's how you tie a tie. >> can i see you had trouble with that tie.
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ainsley: thank you so much, stuart. god bless america banned from classroom is happening at one elementary school because one group complained. steve: next group says that's absurd coming up. ♪ through the night ♪ with a light ♪
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it's a look what your wifi can do now store. a get your questions answered by awesome experts store. it's a now there's one store that connects your life like never before store. the xfinity store is here. and it's simple, easy, awesome. brian: welcome to tuesday here are your headlines, hope you are dressed. expected to hear the trump trump administration's new immigration plan. that will happen at the white house. expected to enhance security at the southern border and increase the number of migrant workers in thest 30,000. unclear when the plan be will be release loaded. part of the warrant service
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officer program officers will have 48 hours to detain a migrant. help keep dangerous criminals off the streets. now ains little and steve. ainsley: thanks, brian. it is one of our country most patriotic songs and says god bless america so why was one elementary school forced to stop saying it after the pledge of allegiance? steve: elementary school in springfield, pennsylvania got a letter from freedom from religious foundation which stated in part god bless america is a prayer. a prayer hosted by a publicly supported school does not pass constitutional muster. but our next guest says people should ignore any suggestion to ban god bless america. ainsley: deputy general council at first liberty jeremy dice joins us now. jeremy, thanks for being with us. >> good morning. thanks for having me. ainsley: good morning. is it unconstitutional? has a court ever said this violates the constitution? >> well, of course not. nor have they said things like in god we trust or even the phrase under god in the
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pledge of allegiance are unconstitutional. perfectly acceptable phrases and things we have used throughout our country's history to describe our great feelings of gratitude for living in the land of the free and the home of the brave. it's a way that we have prepared ourselves before battle and then reminded ourselves after great tragedy. it's a great part of our history and frankly if the members of congress can stand under the united states capitol and belt out the tune certainly elementary students can say it over the loud speaker after the announcement time. steve: jeremy, you know how it works. different entities wind up with a letter from this organization and they are afraid there is going to be a protracted legal fight. it's going to cost them a lot of money. so rather than fight, they just say you know what? we don't need that. >> yeah. that's really regrettable that that kind of thing happens. i would really encourage those folks to go to first liberty.org before they begin to consider responding to such letters. because we would love to help them think that through. look, when we bow to those kind of demands, that kind
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of bullying tactic that we get rid of these phrases that have been so long a part of our nation's history, we begin to undermine the very freedoms that have made this country grand and have led to people like irvin berlin to even put that song together and make those words put together here as well. there is no reason for us to get rid of these phrases. in fact, i would encourage folks to continue to use not only god bless america but in god we trust. remind ourselves how great under god is r. in the pledge of allegiance go. to first liberty.org. we have a special gift to remind your neighbors and friends about how important phrases like in god we trust and god bless america are to our country. ainsley: as a christian my faith is extremely important to me when i think about taking god out of america it really saddens me. i feel like we need him when when have you shootings in synagogues and churches and you have to get wanded before you walk into a church now, where have we come as a country? what's going to happen if we
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continue to push this narrative to take god out of everything? >> well, i fear. i fear for our country if we were to get rid of these things entirely. when we have groups like the one you mentioned earlier that written tent on getting rid of any kind of public utterance of religion in public that's a danger to our society here. look, let me give you the clear and very technical legal analysis. if you get a letter from this organization that says you need to get rid of the words god bless america or if they try to intimidate to you think that sixth grader's use of the phrase god bless america over the intercom announcement times right after they said the words under god in the pledge of allegiance and that's somehow unconstitutional, ignore it it's not worth the paper that it's written on. for that matter, i'm wondering if they are so upset about the phrase god bless america, is the school district there in pennsylvania that is frankly not too far away from where those flights went down on 9/11 are they going to get rid of the dollar bills that have in god we trust on them? are they going to start
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punishing teachers who say god bless you to students that sneeze in the hallway? this somebody a suffered. when the kids say the grass is pink it's not based on any kind of reality just like they say god bless america is unconstitutional there is no reality that supports that. steve: jeremy, exit question, are you going to reach out to the school? >> well, i'm doing that right now at the very least. and any other school district around the country that has these kind of letters make sure we know about it so we can help you out before you respond. steve: jeremy dys from first liberty. we did reach out to sable elementary school have not heard back from them yet. ainsley: as we head to break, here is god bless america. ♪ god bless america ♪ land that i love ♪ stand beside her ♪ and guide her ♪ through the night ♪ with a light ♪ from above ♪ from the mountains
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♪ every girl crazy about a sharp-dressed man. steve: if you missed the top of our program today. brian: i got a problem. steve: brian was lamenting that he has a necktie that is an unusual necktie because for some reason the tail winds up longer than the main body of the tie. brian: i have done it five times it's a little off and too long. ainsley: you never gave up. macy the moral of the story you were determined to wear this tie. brian: i wish i could back you up on this because this is upon further review tied poorly. ainsley: can you do this pull it up a little bit here? brian: i tried treating and it doesn't work for me. steve: we asked for nasa scientists to call in with any suggestions why brian's tie.
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brian: or buzz al drene buzz ald go to the moon. steve: we did have a caller call in and say give him some sis sore. joel do we have scissors here? brian: joel just kept texting. the tie you are wearing is a tall and big size. ainsley: different sizes to choose from. you have obviously got anti-for a taller person. #brian's tie. brian: i got something from garrard. ainsley: oh no. ainsley: are you really going to do that? >> garrard says tuck it into my source. brian: could you at least made another angle so i could resell it? ainsley: i cannot believe you just did that. steve: i just bought you a tie on amazon and it's clip
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on. brian: do you know what you just did? steve: it will be here tomorrow. brian: i'm stuck on the side of the road with a tire you give me a bike. you quit on trying to do this and solve the problem. steve: you seem like it was really you now the square part is sticking out. brian: i always stuck the long piece in my shirt between the buttons. i could have done that. steve: the second emailer is right. you have a big and tall tie. it's just a certain longer. brian: nobody to blame. ainsley: do you ever eat and put the tie over your shoulder? steve: i do that every meal. ainsley: even in a restaurant? steve: there you go. just like that it looks like i cannot resell this tie because i was doing that. steve: it's two ties. ainsley: you could sell that for charity i guarantee somebody would buy it on
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ebay. brian: problem solved. i don't to ask for more emails. steve: problem is solved. if you have suggestions let us know. janice dean is out on the streets of new york city polling the audience about the necktie dilemma. did you see that? ainsley: i did. brian, i will buy you new tie. steve: get two ties so far. brian: i think this is called bullying. janice: do we have instant replay i want to see how steve proceeded. ainsley: going to do it. brian: it's gone. janice: i'm going to buy you a new tie. brian: this is fine it works. janice: it's great television. take a look at the map, shall we? i will start polling people as they come by whether or not it was good for steve to cut the tie off. cutting ties. 54 in new york right now. 45 in chicago. 42 in minneapolis. all right. so a little bit of serious weather here. we could see the potential for hail, damaging winds and tornadoes today across a big section of the country from
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the texas big bend area all the way up nebraska and missouri. moderate risk for large struckive tornadoes for panhandle of texas and oklahoma. that's going to really last throughout the afternoon in through the evening. tomorrow, the same areas could get hit with large hail, damaging winds, isolated tornadoes and heavy rainfall. several inches in just a matter of hours possible. we also could see the potential for heavy snow across the rockies. several feet of snow. there are your flood advisories. the risk for some very heavy rain in a short period of time. the rest of the country looks pretty good. we are looking at cloudy skies right here in new york. but the sun will peek out. okay, brian. i love you, my friend. brian: all right. thanks, janice. don't worry, your crowd is coming. ainsley: we hope. if you are in the area come on down. okay. so there is this organization called i am second. have you all heard of it? they interview actors and
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celebrities and models and just people of faith. they want to inspire nonprofit organization. the people behind it just want stories to be told that inspire you to get closer to god. steve: i am second behind god. ainsley: you sit in white chair and you tell this story and they interview you. this happened probably six months ago and they are releasing the one they did for me because it's mother's day this weekend. and so it's my journey about becoming a mother. i get kind of emotional in there because i talked about my miss carriage. but, got blessed me so much after that miscarriage because then i got pregnant with hayden a few months later. i wouldn't have hayden if it wasn't for that listen about that tough time in my life. >> the baby was really small at the first appointment. and we knew that i just thought that maybe we had miscalculated the birthday or she had miscalculated it and maybe the numbers were off. she puts the stuff on your
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stomach and runs that ultrasound and she sought baby and we saw the baby on the screen and just like before she had to find the heart beat and we saw the heart and she put the wand in that area and there was no heart beat. so she looked at us and she just said i'm so sorry. and she just tried and she tried and there was nothing there. there was no heart beat. steve: oh, man, it's got to be hard to retell that story. ainsley: every time i tell it i get emotional because it was a hard time. i will meet that little girl in heaven a few months later i met my precious hayden. if you are going through a tough time god has a ultimate plan. you have to go through the valley in order to get to the mountain. i learned through this journey, this amazing life that i have had through ups and downs that god ultimately has a plan. watch this. >> i know that women are hurting. i know men are hurting. i know you can get through it. it might not be your plan and it might not be what you want for your life, know that god has a plan, god
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works it all out and life is just -- is such journey and every step of it good or bad is still beautiful. ainsley: if you want to watch it, it's not a long video if you are going through a hard time or experienced a miscarriage so many women have come up to me and said they went through the same thing and never wanted to talk about it i hope my journey can help you and you can find god in my life and listen no one is perfect we all sin. gosh, we all have ups and downs. it's life. it's part of the journey. you have got to embrace it and just let jesus take the wheel as carrie underwood would say. so many people. steve: not just your story. a lot of the people. ainsley: robertson from "duck dynasty" corey cathy, kathie lee griffin. josh turner. the singer we have had from king and country. he and his wife how they met. so lots of cool stories on there.
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brian: definitely kathie lee gifford not griffin. will will will will will. ainsley: kathie lee gifford who is a friend of mine. she is a christian and talks about her faith too. steve: website is i am second.com/ainsley. ainsley: i will put it on my facebook and my twitter account and all of that during the break. steve: all right. good enough. that was really something to be able to tell that story. ainsley: thank you. there is apparent lay backer behind this who is a very wealthy individual who gave money to do these stories because he loves god so much. thank you to that organization for allowing knee talk about god. steve: check it out. all right. 1 minutes before the top of the hour. brian: coming up straight ahead. democrats threatening to throw attorney general barr behind bars. >> have to have him hand locked up. >> hand cuff. >> who are you going to handcuff? >> i'm going to start with mr. barr. steve: whose side is the law law
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on? judge napolitano is up next ♪ ♪
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what's up with your... partner? not again. limu that's your reflection. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ jillian: good morning welcome back. instagram fact checkers will comb the platform for posts that spread misinformation. it will take it off the explore page and #search results tat verizon sprint and t-mobile are reportedly being sued for selling your location data on the black market. they are accused of violating fec laws by sharing account numbers, location and information to third parties and selling it to bounty hunters, bail bondsmen debt collectors and middle men. i heard ainsley say awesome in the background. all your information.
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steve: meanwhile, brian. brian: house committee schedule ago vote this week to hold attorney general barr in contempt over the unredacted mueller report as democrats take it a step further. pushing to put him behind bars. >> you have to have him locked up unless he agrees to participate. >> each chamber has an inherent power to compel a witness to testify. that includes arrest and even includes jail. >> we sent the sergeant of arms out to handcuff the individual who is defying to testify. >> who are you going to handcuff. >> i'm going to start with mr. barr. steve: they want mr. barr behind bars. whose side is the law on we start with judicial analyst and host of liberty file on fox nation judge andrew napolitano. they are coequal and a jail. >> it hasn't been used in a long time. steve: they have got one. >> when two branches of
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government disagree who solves it? the ore branch there is a very easy way out of this. the house judiciary committee serves a subpoena on the attorney general. he believes the laws which he has sworn to uphold prevent him from complying with it completely the way they want him. to say you take this subpoena. you make a motion to quash it, that is to suppress it and a judge calls it and then you follow what the judge's ruling is. if you don't like the judge's ruling. you appeal it will this make its way to the supreme court? i doubt it. but it could. and the judiciary is the branch that decides what the law means, what the constitution means and how it should be interpreted. rather than these threats will locking up the attorney general. that's absurd. ainsley: judge, wasn't eric holder held in contempt. >> yes. ainsley: if barr is held in contempt will they go and arrest him? >> i doubt it holding someone in contempt is a footnote in history. in some states it could impair your -- i don't know where the attorney general's license to practice law. in some states it could impair your ability to practice law. i doubt that he is worried
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about that. but they shouldn't use contempt as a political weapon. they should only use it when someone is truly defying them. so, when the law says do this and the subpoena says do that and this and that are the opposite. you present it to a judge. ainsley: law says he cannot release the unredacted full report to congress. >> portions of it, yes. that's when you, i'm actually surprised that the doj hasn't taken the subpoena to a federal district court judge in d.c. and let her decide it. it would go to the presiding judge of the united states district court. she would either assign it to another judge or hear it herself. brian: judge, this is so unbelievable and juvenile. he said i want to testify. they want to put a staff there to question him for the first time in 32 years. judge: that does not trouble me. he is a very smart guy. and quite frankly, most of the questions put to him by the political hacks were not serious questions. brines brian they weren't questions. they were statements.
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judge: remember senator hirono. she may not believe that god bless her. it wasn't a question. it was a long statement. when you put statements up you have a mature discussion about the law. brian: they have a disagreement. it's disrespect to the attorney general. there is impasse. now they have to sue each other? come on. >> it's not a question of suing each other. it's a question of you who you decide, your honor, you tell me what to do with this subpoena. and, brian, that's the way it's supposed to look. brian: how many times did you have to do it to get the deed heat. >> sometimes more than one. brian: i'm doing it at 3:00 in the morning. steve: do you know how i do it? i always start with the tail on the first button. somehow it always fits. i have a system. >> something harry truman taught you. steve: i have ordered brian a new necktie it will be here via amazon a clip on tomorrow.
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judge, thank you very much. ainsley: as more and more states legalize marijuana are researchers ignoring the real risk like impact on crime? steve: our next guest thinks so and says they are doing it on purpose. we will talk about that next ♪ ♪ tell me what in the world you are doing in her windshiel. >> mom: honey is that a chip? >> tech: they wanted it fixed fast so they brought it to us. >> mom: hi. >> tech: with our in-shop chip repair service, we can fix it the same day... guaranteed. plus with most insurance a safelite chip repair is no cost to you. >> mom: really? drive safely. all right. ♪ acoustic music >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, ♪ safelite replace.
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steve: as the number of states legalizing marijuana all across the country as you can see on that graphic new questions about the impact it's had on crime and traffic deaths. brian: next guest argues researchers are purposely finding ways to minimize the impact. author of "tell your about
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marijuana, mental illness and violence." alex bernieson. >> washington and colorado states to open dispensaries in 2014. since then driving deaths up 30% in two states. there is data showing that the number -- data is better in colorado than washington. number of deaths where people had thc in their blood in a fatal accident has more than doubled in colorado that's a pretty good indicator. steve: isn't the argument that people were making before they legalized it? >> yeah. it's a big argument right now about in states like new york and new jersey they are talking about legalization. by the way the worst traffic accident in the last decade the upstate new york limo accident that killed 20 people the driver had no alcohol in his blood only thc. brian: is there a way to test out in the field like
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we have the breathalyzer? >> at this point essentially, no. they are working on stuff but there is no test. the other argument unfortunately is that people say if you smoke a lot you develop a tolerance there can't be one standard as there is for alcohol. i think that's a really bad argument but it's an argument. brian: push back in the seattle times they write no increase in violent crime that can be attributed to the marijuana legalization. >> marijuana driving same stuff has happened. bunch of researchers who are ignoring the top line data. top line data for driving and crime is in the book it shows -- well not driving but crime i go into great detail in the book deaths are way up and there is a bunch of academic researcher whose are just ignoring this. steve: why do you think they are trying to minimize the impact? >> i think, unfortunately, there is an ideological bent towards legalization and it's caused people to ignore the data. there is a guy at the university of oregon named ben hanson who has done a
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couple of studies. instead of looking at the broadest data set he sort of pulls data from here and there. and by the way sometimes even that shows an increase as it does with driving data. instead of acknowledging that he says well, if we look at these confidence intervals we can still say it's similar. he is basically not acknowledging the top line numbers. brian: well that's crazy. also i think money has a lot to do with it. so much rich people or so many businesses now invested in marijuana. >> investing in marijuana. other things people who have made donations to places like the brookings institute who are in favor of legalization. and unfortunately i think that's infected the research. steve: he has written a great book it's called tell your children the truth about marijuana. alex baronson thank you so much for joining us live. >> thank you so much for having me. brian: 4 minutes before the top of the hour. steve: still ahead on our telecast dennis prager, former governor scott walker
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and kellyanne conway. ♪ this is the greatest show ♪ take care of us. it was an instant savings and i should have changed a long time ago. it was funny because when we would call another insurance company, hey would say "oh we can't beat usaa" we're the webber family. we're the tenney's we're the hayles, and we're usaa members for life. ♪ get your usaa auto insurance quote today.
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save $400 on select sleep number 360 smart beds. only for a limited time. ♪ we stayed up all night long ♪ made our drinks too strong ♪ 10 feet tall. steve: getting close to camping time and today summer camp is coming to fox square. we have all sorts of summer camps represented so if you are thinking about summer camp for someone in your family. we are going to show you some of the great programs around the country. brian: that first shot was kind of interesting. camp counselor martha maccallum and tucker carlson will be there to make your summer even more exciting. ainsley: harris faulkner is at camp bret baier is there. steve: how great is that? that is this hour and the next hour as well. meanwhile the biggest thing blowing up the internet is brian's tech my.
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brian: right. steve: if you were with us an hour ago he was complaining tie was too long apparently just too long. so at the urging of the producer, they said hey, steve, just cut off his necktie. ainsley: it's not your fault. steve: you said you have been getting text messages from people. brian: you want to cut this at angle because have you more fashion conscience than steve. brian: chris chulo would you so he this on the edge so it doesn't fray? ainsley: rhonda said hey problem solve his tie ask not too long. steve's new nickname mcgiver. steve: all i need is a pair of scissors and duct tape. cut tie piece as pocket scarf. that's a great idea.
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brian. steve: a lot of shows they don't do this live on the air. brian: this is great. steve: i used to work in a clothing store menswear in clay city, kansas. ainsley: that looks great. brian: that looks great. steve: matches perfectly. brian: better than looking at peter strzok's text messages. ainsley: going to a yard sale and buying something and using in a different way. brian: i'm going to actually make this whole suit a towel tomorrow and dry off after the shower. it will be fantastic. and i will use the liner for a bathing suit this summer. ainsley: this is what the show used to be like right before all this mueller investigation stuff, right? don't we miss it. brian: yeah. for 15 years we forgot this
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thing called content and we would just wing it. no one had the batteries for the teleprompter. ainsley: didn't they write down the run down of what you were going to be talking about. brian: in longhand in pencil matt singerman. steve: i'm a little jealous i kind of want one of those now too. brian: you want to do it, too? steve: let's talk about a group of republican senators going to the white house later on today to hear details of the immigration plan that jared kushner has been working on for a number of months while the details have not been released we do have a guest list and the plan is expected to boost security at the southern border and to implement a merit based system for migrants. brian: i think they want about 5 million bucks to get it going. if you watched laura ingraham's show last night
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or the coverage got things like griff jenkins and others doing at the border. you see we can't waste a day what's going to happen at the border right now a million people come in this year. the border patrol is absolutely overwhelmed. they can't hire fast enough nor do they have the applications fast enough look at some of the people there to attend. my hope is as "new york times" writes today that people on the other side, democrats understand it is a crisis at the border. it's no longer a debate at the border. you are irresponsible as a lawmaker if you don't come up with a plan of action. ainsley: you are right. well, you know it's springtime. the azaleas are blooming, the malice ter's ceremony. the golf tournament happens. tiger woods gosh he prevailed this year. everyone was talking about it including the president. the president plays golf with tiger occasionally. he awarded him yesterday the presidential medal of freedom at the white house. look at this. steve: that's right. it was a rare rose garden ceremony where the president put that around the neck of
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tiger woods. keep in mind only three golfers in history have been awarded the medal of freedom. jack nicklaus, arnold palmer and during comments tiger woods revealed that tiger actually named his son charlie after charlie sifford pictured screen right. ainsley: first african-american join the pga and like a grandpa to him. here is tiger woods. >> have you seen the good and bad and highs and lows. in '97, yes, i won the masters and i was there to -- i ended up hugging my dad and my mom. my dad is no longer here but my mom is here. i love you, mom. i have battled. i have tried to -- i try to hang in there and i have tried to come back and play, play the great game of golf again. amazing master's experience that i just had a few weeks ago certainly is part of the
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highlight of what i have accomplished so far in my life on the golf course. this is an honor. brian: i put on a sirius app. to listen to the introduction that donald trump had for tiger woods. i walked from 48th to 34th and he was still reading it because that's everything that he has been through. steve: 28 weeks. brian: donald trump has stood there with him through the highs and lows and resource and friend and a business partner. so this meant a lot to him to see him prevail like that. and it was amazing to me to see people critical of this and say he got it too early. not really. at 43 years old as an athlete you have peaked already and actually he has been famous since he was 3 years old so to me it's right on time. ainsley: can you tell he is humbled. he feels bad for some of the things that's happened in the past it seems. he has turned over a new leaf. he introduced his son and daughter there and caddie. he has a girlfriend now. and the president even remembered his dad earl.
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he said he is a special guy, too. tiger woods lives jupiter florida in island and donald trump has a house in mar-a-lago which is 20 miles away. they have made it very clear their friendship has predated the presidency. just given the fact that it was such a beautiful event to honor, you know, like tiger said he has had some ups and downs, as it turns out, there are some who do not think that this was a good idea. brian: baltimore sun headlines plenty of athletes are refusing to stand with trump, not tiger woods and they go on to tell why they shouldn't. in the op-ed they said this: we wish mr. woods would have taken the stand against hatred and declined the award given the racial ethnic rift mr. trump has widened and exploited. embracing a man who incited bigotry and racism. that is totally inaccurate to the person tiger woods knows. i also would say that people also think that's laughable
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is darryl straw berry, george foreman, herbal walker, mike tyson some people who happen to be black who have met with the president and known him for a couple of decades and don't feel as though that description is accurate. steve: the army team football team was there at one point the president mentioned that he was -- and there they are posing in the oval room. ainsley: beautiful uniforms. steve: he had comments about how he was considering if an athlete at army is really good and gets, you know, recruited by the pros, they could serve their military service after they are in the nfl. brian: like the roger staubachs in the world they go and choose the military academy. many people think they ever slamming the lid on the professional career. why should that that be? maybe an exemption in that direction. i think it would be great. david robinson grew like six inches in college and next thing you know he couldn't fit in a submarine.
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drafted him in the first round and said see you in two years. maybe there is something that could be done there. ainsley: god bless them all. let us know what you think friends@foxnews.com. meantime hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. welcome back. jillian: i believe there is yellow thread in there in the sewing kit in my office. we have serious news to get. to say we will begin with a fox news alert. look at this sick site. a suspected cop killer seen smiling after his arrest in mississippi overnight. darian attkisson accused of gunning down robert mckeithen. fellow officers lining up outside of police headquarters where the 23-year veteran of the force ambushed to watch attkisson be taken into custody. >> these officers have spent some of them have been up for 38, 40, 44 hours we thought it fitting for them to be here and see the arrest that they worked so hard to try to effect.
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jillian: mckeithen was planning to retire at the end of the year. he leaves behind wife and four kids. 16th officer shot and killed in the line of duty this year. a recent u.s. college graduate is among the victims of a horrific plane crash in moscow. new mexico native jeremy brooks dying days before starting his dream job as a fly fishing guide in russia. he says his business will never be the same. >> in this world that we have with a lot of anger and hatred around, jeremy didn't -- was -- he was so positive in everyone's life. jillian: at least 41 people were killed after the plane burst into flames during an emergency landing. the exact cause is under investigation. treasury secretary steve mnuchin denying a key house democrat's request for president trump's tax returns. mnuchin says the request, quote: presents serious constitutional questions. the resolution of which may
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have lasting consequences for all taxpayers. committee chairman richard neil tried using a federal law requiring the irs to provide any taxpayers returns to some lawmakers. country music legend dolly parton is honored by the fbi to donating to victims of the 2016 gatlinburg wild wildfires. >> it is an honor to be recognized by the fbi there is no higher calling than your mission to protect and serve us. many thanks again and, remember, that i will always love you ♪ jillian: the fbi says parton and her dolly wood foundation gave $10,000 to each of the 900 families affected. ainsley: gosh. we all love her. isn't she amazing? steve: some good news out of some bad news. jillian, thank you. brian: all right. 11 minutes now after the hour. ice launching a most wanted list and a way to get around sanctuary city laws. how will that work? ainsley: acting ice director
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matt albence tells us next. are you ready old man? ha! i been outworking you all day. see your authorized mahindra dealer to test drive the retriever 1000.
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♪ brian: ice issuing a brand new most wanted list of illegal immigrant fugitives. list so far involving seven illegals accused of
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manslaughter, homicide and other crimes against u.s. citizens. the victims' families reached out to trump's newly created office voice or victims of immigration crimes engagement for help in cracking down on fugitives. matt albence. you will be taking the job until mark morgan takes over. are you okay with that. >> sure, i don't know mark personally but he has outstanding record and service to this country so i look forward to working with him. brian: you will go back to the deputy position and you will have this to deal with and that is the most wanted list. how will this help? >> we have a tip line up in vermont that gets hundreds of thousands of tips a year. we are just getting the visibility of some of these more heinous criminals out there on the street that are fugitives and any help we can get from the public to locate, identify and remove public safety threats we certainly welcome. brian: take a look at them now. hopefully are able to take it in chavez, juarez.
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maltos. mogollon. mejia; harrell and rodriguez. who is focus at ice, who is first, who is second, who is third most wanted and not in terms of individuals but how do you prioritize who to go after? >> in terms of interior enforcement on the civil immigration side our priority is as it always has been which is removing the most dangerous public safety threat from our streets. nine out of 10 people we arrest are either convicted criminal or arrested for a criminal violation. we use our limited resources to go after those individuals that are creating a danger to society. so public safety threats, rape, asalt, weapon aassault. weapons charges. we will target for aggressive action. brian: you have a new program that begins allows local law enforcement to work with ice to issue arrest warrants in local cities. how would that work if your sheriff tells you are a
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sanctuary city and look the other way. are they going to listen to you or their sheriff. >> this is a voluntary program that we worked out with the national sheriff's association which is a tremendous part o partner of ou. sheriff will sign up with program deputy will get training execute immigration warrant at the direction of an ice officer or supervisor. brian: hopefully that helps. next. i love the idea of swabbing the interior of the mouth to get d.n.a. samples to within two hours, find out if these families really belong together if there is a relationship there. how is it working? >> we are getting ready to kick off that pilot this week. we have been surging resources to the border in the past several weeks with regard to identifying those fraudulent families. we cents special agents, forensic interviewers, analysts down to the border. within the first couple of weeks, three out of every 10 families that we have identified has been fraud length. we have been pursuing these cases criminally and prosecuted more than 100
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people. more than 100 people utilized false documents. not just fraud length families individuals posing as children. 23-year-olds posing as 16-year-olds so they can get released. brian: we are letting a thousand a week out into the interior of the country because we don't have judges to find out where thinks status lies. >> brian, we are releasing much more than 1,000 a weeks. we have released 168,000 family yiewckets since december 31st unfortunately. not just the immigration judges. we haven't been resourced by congress to viewer own attorneys to prosecute these cases. you can have as many judges as you want. if we don't have attorneys to represent the government in court and prosecute these cases you will still have that bottleneck. we have more than 800,000 on the docket. that number is not going to shrink unless congress makes a significant investment into the entire immigration enforcement continuum. brian: if lawmakers are watching right now who are more importantly their staffers, can you tell them what needs to be done at their desk to help you
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better at the border. >> first thing we need to do is close the loopholes and change the outdated laws. we know that these smuggling organizations are recycling children and using these children over and over again because the adults that they are coming with who are not their parents know that they will be released. we just had a case within the first week of our surgeon that we had at the borderborder where a guatemalan 7-year-old girl was being rented by her mother and third time we found her being used by somebody else to enter the country because they know we can't hold them. brian: no democrat or republican wants to see that happen. i hope reasonable minds help you guys out. matt albence thank you so much. good luck in your spot as you hold that for mark morgan who hopefully will get confirmed. thanks. matt. >> thanks, brian. appreciate it. brian: can wisdom from the bible help solve debate over socialism and abortion? our next guest just wrote that book dennis prager is here with lessons everyone can use next. and there is dennis
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steve: time now for news by the numbers. first number $2,500, that's how much the ceo of this airliner that skidded off a florida runway and into that river is offering to each passenger was a goodwill gesture. ainsley: that's nice. steve: rescuers saved all 142 people on board flying in from gitmo. authorities are still trying to figure out what went wrong. next number, 18 as in 18 minutes. that's how long a swarm of bees delayed the start of a baseball game in cincinnati. reds pitcher derek dietrich
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emerging from the dugout from a bee keeper suit that saved the day. some insecticide. finally two. that's how many people appeared to be inside the car but eagle eyed police officer pulled the guy over and found a man can in the passenger seat. he dressed the dummy in. gain access to carpool lane. ainsley: what if you have baby in the car does that count as two people? steve: yeah. brian: if you have a man can get ears that's the problem officer able to see no ears. ainsley: bigger head. dennis prager is on the mission to bring the bible back to the forefront in our society especially for wisdom on controversial issues of the day like socialism, abortion, and even higher education scandals. brian: dennis out with a brand new book today doing just that it's called the rational bible genesis and he is here with insight and his very first tv interview for the book unless you
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cheated us on the way over. >> first one. absolutely. as promised. brian: we have a book of genesis. why should we get your book of genesis? >> because people need to understand it. there is a big problem today greatest book in the history of the world. even atheists even people who hate religion have to acknowledge the most significant book ever written. people even if they hate it should understand it. so i know biblical hebrew like i know english and i have taught this all of my life to people of every faith and no faith. my point is to show you why this can transform your life. the insights that it has. and this is the second volume. exodus came out last year. i'm not going in order obviously. this is the first book. and to my -- i feel self-conscious as you could see because i don't normally stutter but it was the best selling nonfiction book in the united states last year on amazon for and cosco has
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ordered 46,000 copies. i only mention this because this is my dream nobody writes bible commentaries to get rich. my dream is to become the most important book in america. the place that killed the bible is the university. the university has become the stupidest place in america. steve: so there are different chapters in your book that explain things that are going on in life right now. >> that's right. steve: and have you studied the bible for 40 years. so, for instance, in chapter 2 you actually talk about something that's in the news a lot and that is socialism. >> yes. there are two big issues. of course, the bible doesn't use the word socialism. it's too new. but it is extremely mistrustful of human nature. therefore, it doesn't want power to be in the hands of a few people and socialism by definition is power in the hands of the few at that
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capitalism and free market in the hands of the individuals. i'm say companies don't have power. no company ever guilt a gulag or auschwitz. i'm not a company fan but let's be honest. it is very, very mistrustful of power and in that book genesis, god says the will of man's heart is towards evil from his youth. ainsley: you also talk about abortions. >> no, abortion is actually in exodus. and it's not actually abortion. it's about the unborn. >> first five books what i'm concentrating on because that is the basis for jews and christians of the rest of the bible has nothing to say about that except in one specific paragraph in exodus and i deal with that at great length. brian: what about gender roles? >> this is the big thing the only division that god declares significant is male, female.
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god couldn't care less about race, couldn't care less about ethnicity. not even mentioned do you know adam's race or ethnicity? no. do you know adam's sex? yep, male and female he created them. ainsley: genesis he says he created the world in seven days. is his timing our timing? >> this is an issue. i deal with that, too. there are people who believe that it's literal. i don't. but i have no problem with these people and it's not a debate we should ever enter. it makes us look silly. ainsley: focusing on the wrong thing. >> wrong issue for me. yom can be a period of time like we say in our day, it doesn't mean today, so too in biblical hebrew. on the other hand i don't dismiss these people as kooks. if god could created the universe in a billion years he could create it in six days? what do i care? steve: you were talking with ainsley. she asked you about abortion. did you see the sound bite a couple of days ago from a
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state representative down in alabama. >> unbelievable. steve: we will play the sound bite and get your comment. listen to this. >> some kids are unwanted. so you kill them now or kill them later. you bring them in the world unwanted, unloved. you send them to the electric chair. you kill them now or kill them later. steve: what do you think? >> look, we -- those of us who predicted that the death of god will lead to the death of absolute standards were right. we are now allowing infanticide. and it is inevitable. if it is a nonissue, a day before birth, why is it an issue a day after birth? there is no answer that the pro-choice community has for that question. brian: those people killing each other because we are not the same religion what do you say to them? >> the greatest sin, this is
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not prager. this is in the 10 commandments, there is only one sin in the 10 commandments says he will not forgive and that is using his name in vain and it doesn't mean saying oh my god what a lousy day at the office. that is a misunderstanding. i explain. brian: but killing in his name is. >> that's the worst sin you could commit. brian: i hear you. steve: new book is called genesis, god creation and destruction. >> the rational bible. steve: rational bible. ainsley: amazing, he breaks down the entire book of genesis. brian: i'm calling for genesis over exodus more sales. straight ahead. >> thank you. ainsley: thanks, dennis, congratulations. almost time for summer camp. steve: sump camps set up on fox square. what parents need to know before sending your kid? brian: with bret baier and martha mccallum. ♪ ♪ [music playing]
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♪ you just keep me hanging on ♪ brian: normally i say put the shot on net. not today. shot of the morning nothing but net. a bobcat found stuck in a soccer goal in colorado. totally prone. steve: how did that happen? somebody spotted the animal suspended in mid-air behind their house and tried freeing it. they called parks and wildlife when the wild cat tried fighting back as the wild cat would. the cat eventually clawed its way through the netting, probably chewed itself out of it and ran away. ainsley: oh. yeah, i wouldn't go near that cat even though that does make me feel sorry for the animal. steve: figure it out. brian: no idea soccer was growing this way in this country. bobcats know in europe and
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germany to avoid the net. steve: nothing but net. brian: where is jillian? ainsley: she is upstairs with headlines. jillian: good morning. get you caught up on some of the stories we are following starting with this today family and friends plan to line the streets to honor a north carolina cop ambushed in the line of duty. canine officer jordan sheldon shot and killed during a traffic stop over the weekend. the suspect taking his own life. hundreds visiting a memorial and leaving flowers, cards, and signs to honor the six-year veteran of the force. sheldon's funeral is set for this friday in charlotte. pamela anderson is planning to visit julian assange in jail. wikileaks tweeting that the former bay watch star will be in london for the meeting today. she has been a long-time supporter of assange and called on the u.k. to not extradite him to the u.s. assange was sentenced to nearly a year in jail after his arrest last month for jumping bail. 2020 democratic presidential candidate andrew yang is
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promising free cash for all but according to a new study it won't solve any problems. the british think tank new economic foundation studying 16 universal basic income programs around the world. researchers finding no evidence that any of the different trial runs could actually work over time. the report suggests reforming social protection systems and better better equality public services instead. and take a look at this. a chocolate lab wowing a crowd in los angeles with a tricky jenga maneuver. the pup knocking a block loose with paw before grabbing with her mouth and pulling it out of the tower. the video has been a hit on social media as can you imagine with some people saying the pooch is better at the game than they are. love that and do you know who loves those dog videos and cat videos? chan miss dean. >> of course i do. favorite thing to post on twitter. jillian: i know. janice: hi, everybody. how are you? oh my gosh, thank you for
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being here this morning. thank you, thank you, thank you. who did you want to say hi to? >> my husband j.d. in florida. janice: forecast forecast for tuesday may 7th hi from south carolina. what's your name? >> christian. >> what's the forecast right now in new york? >> it's 56 degrees and partly cloudy. janice: very nice. going to be partly sunny later? >> yes. janice: yes, it is. take a look at the maps real quick. show you the potential for severe storms across the central u.s. large hail, damaging winds some tornadoes as well and heavy rain. if you live in these areas that you see shaded in green, yellow and red, you need to be on alert. we can see the potential for strong storms including tornadoes. know what to do if there is a watch or warning and see the potential for flash flooding. okay. do you know that we are setting up a camp here on the plaza on fox square? >> yes. >> that's where we are going to steve ainsley and brian right now. ainsley: thank you so much, janice. we are here with john and his grandfather started this camp called the river valley
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ranch camp in maryland. they are under the umbrella of what's the big umbrella? >> camp conference association oversees all christian camps. ainsley: sean hannity one of the counselors and martha mccallum? >> overseeing all the kids here today doing a great job. ainsley: thank you so much for teaching kids ages 7 to 17 what is this here. >> gaga. new take on god's -- gives the kids an opportunity to participate. don't have to be super athletic. it's really a good group. ainsley: new dodge ball. safer dodge ball. >> safer. lots of kids can do. you don't have to be super active to do it. ainsley: steve and brian are taking part. >> archery. doing target practice part actually set up kind of like paint ball and dodge ball where they can kind of take each other out so to speak. it's a really fun kind of new way to get back old school.
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brian: it's not dangerous. ainsley: marshmallows at the end instead of an arrow. really fun way. >> we got to be safe. ainsley: what about the rock climbing wall? >> this is one of the adventure elements. taking kids out of their comfort zone to help them teach about. ainsley: who got it? brian got it. >> help kids learn how to take a step of faith. build confidence push out of their comfort zone to gain confidence just hard for kids to get these days. ainsley: what's advice you have for kids sending. >> go to power of camp.com. find a camp in your area. lots of opportunities for all different types of camps you can participate. in camp is a wonderful way to learn and stretch and get outside and unplug and make the best of their summer. ainsley: what about the parent who wants the kid to go but kid doesn't like to spend a night out. >> it's harder for the
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patience an kids there are day camp ops. ainsley: what about care packages. >> we do them where we have them on site you can buy them and we deliver them. a lot of new things going on in camping which is real exciting. ainsley: do you want to plug your website. >> river valley ranch.com and power of camp.com. brian: do the kids ever want to stay with you. >> only time they cry is when they leave: they grow up. ainsley: my momma applied too late one year all my friends went and i could not go. >> don't wait. ainsley: scott walker is coming up. stay with us. brian: how great am i?
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jillian: good morning, welcome back. headlines now. florida couple loses couple with son with cancer after treating marijuana with marijuana oil. running off with the boy. he will go home with his grandmother once released from the hospital. today denver will vote on decriminalizing magic "america'mushrooms. ha lewis knohallucinogen selline mushrooms would still be illegal. hallucinogenic. steve: thank you, jillian. sue until it's blue. next guest sounding the
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alarm on the left's judicial power grab as some have described it saying it's time for republicans to wake up and see how unelected judges are redrawing maps to help elect more democrats. here to explain scott walker former governor of wisconsin and national finance chair chairman for the republican redistricting trust. governor, good to be with you. >> i'm bummed not to be there to play that summer fun stuff. steve: summertime. go to camp, governor. what does sue until it's blue mean? >> what have you got eric holder with the support of barack obama spending hundreds of millions of dollars across the nation just go in from one state after the next and they sue until it's blue. they are using a litigation process to take redistricting out of the hands of the people we elect, the people we hold accountable in our state legislative bodies and trying to send it to the courts where they have friendly folks, many of whom have been appointed by some of their allies and they are trying to sue to change the makeup really for, i think, for a generation to come in
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terms of putting democrats in power. steve: all right. let's take a look at headlines from the "new york times." judges rule michigan congressional districts are unconstitutionally jerrymandered. they also had ohio congressional map is illegal jerry man der federal court rules. so what happens is they start suey. >> >> actions by the court. this is what they do. whole strategy of the left is to keep going until they find a friendly judge. someone who is not directly elected and accountable to the voters and try to sue. they did it firsthand in wisconsin. they tried to take over our wisconsin supreme court. thankfully we fought back just about a month ago. but their investigate strategies take over the wisconsin supreme court so they would have friendly activist majority in the wisconsin supreme court. they are doing it in ohio and michigan. already look even in last year's elections there is
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about 15 seats in four different states where they already used the litigation process to try to make it competitive. that's at least part of the reason why nancy pelosi is now the speaker. they want to make her and people like her permanently in charge of the u.s. house. we can't let them do that we have got to fight back to for truly fair maps. if we have fair maps. our ideas work. if we have a competitive marketplace to sell our message to the american people we can win district by district. we can't do it if it's always stuck in the court. steve: isn't it up to the state legislatures to figure out how to draw a district on the map? >> that's exactly right. that's the way most people want it. people they want elect are accountable. what they do is go from state to state and they try and litigate. they sue, they pick a state and then they sue until it's blue and that's the strategy we have senile used over and over again. there is a lot of folks out there unelected bureaucrats. these commissions they create which are clearly partisan. where you put power in the hands of people who aren't elected and then these judges. many of these federal judges who have lifetime
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appointments and they love nothing more than to be activists out there. i appreciate the fact that the president tweeted about it. steve: he did. >> i don't know if people understand how significant this is. this isn't just about the 2020 elections. it's about the fact that they could put in place maps across america that make it almost impossible for the next decade to win in these districts. steve: that's why you are the finance chairman for the national republican redistricting trust. former governor scott walker. thank you for joining us live today. >> thanks for having us on. steve: 10 minutes before the top of the hour. selling a house can be difficult. it doesn't have to be. we have simple tips to get your house ready in day two of our real estate series that's coming up next. how to fix that grout. ♪ people living in competition ♪ all i want is to have my peace of mind ♪ so you only pay for what you need. nice. but, uh... what's up with your... partner? not again. limu that's your reflection. only pay for what you need.
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>> i will sell this house today. ♪ >> i will sell this house today. >> i will sell this house today. brian: you want to sell that house today. there is a lot to do to get your house ready to sell today. ainsley: here with us on day two of our real estate series is home reno variety and designer shay mills heiser what you need to do before putting your house on the market. good to see you again. >> thank you for having me. one of the most important things you can do is have a welcoming front door. we all know kind of doors get the weather. they the first things people see sometimes they get a little bit washed. i would say get it stained cleaned sealed looking nice. get all that grime that's on your fixtures around the door. get it looking better. what's nice is it's easy. all have you got to do is sand your door a little bit. i would recommend taking it
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off the hinge and sand it down with 150 grit sand paper and stain it. brian: if you ever want to spend any more money on their house because they are trying to sell it? >> what's nice this is easy. this is a dyi kind of thing. literally if you are staining your door you get a little bit on that piece of cloth and you just stain it look how easy that is. ainsley: changes out the handle makes it look a little bit more modern. >> it's got paint on it even just cleaning if you can't change your fixtures at least clean them. ainsley: what about the kitchen? >> kitchen and tile gets kind of gross we don't notice it because we get used to it guests come over and tile gets discolored. clean your grout. clean it, use like a solution like this leave it on there 10 minutes and leave it sit and scub it off with a brush or paint it can you actually use a little grout pen like this and press it on there. brian: little cheating. if there is bloodstains get the bloodstains off. >> i do recommend that.
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ainsley: hopefully there hasn't been a murder in your house. definitely looks a lot better than that. one of my biggest pet peeves is when you see lights of all different colors in the house. yellow lights on the wall. day lights in the lamps. no, you can't do that have them even. i say pick one and go with it if you are going to go with a bright light. have everything in your house bright white. if you are going more yellow tone have everything else in a even yellow tone. ainsley: it does mike a difference. >> when it's yours house it draws you your attention away from what they should be looking at. brian: next organize your bathroom get some caddies. >> this is more of a convenience for people selling their home. realistically when you are selling a home you want it to feel like 60% lived in realistically 100 percent. keep caddies in the shower and baskets in your living room. have a showing coming up. throw everything in there and tuck it into a closet other put it under your sink. brian: have you seen, shae, turn a house into getting
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the asking price by doing these little things. >> all these things i just recommended make a huge difference. you want it to present well. you want it to feel clean and you at this point in time to feel like the exact lifestyle people buying your home want. ainsley: want your house clean and clutter free. >> exactly. ainsley: thanks, shae. brian: good job, shae. considering our real estate series tomorrow. what financial steps to do to take ownership of your home. ainsley: still ahead, counselor to the president, kellyanne conway she is going to be live with us. ♪ ♪ ♪ .. every chip will crack. this daughter was home visiting when mom saw a chip in her windshield. >> mom: honey is that a chip? >> tech: they wanted it fixed fast so they brought it to us. >> mom: hi. >> tech: with our in-shop chip repair service, we can fix it the same day... guaranteed. . .
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brian: look at all that, it makes me want to go to camp. could we get two weeks or a month off to go do camp? steve: when i went to camp. they didn't have a climbing wall. nothing in kansas was very high. ainsley: two weeks together. you could do that. brian: have you before done that? has bret baier taken a month off went to camp. ainsley: now there is maternity leave. if dawn has another baby you could take two weeks off. brian: i will to to camp. that will be great. steve: we have summer camp on "fox & friends" square. we'll show you various camps and camping opportunities. there are great ideas. brian: for those that don't want their kids all around during the summer. steve: that is big. not as big what lit up the internet this morning. brian: even on meadite on this
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story. ainsley: it was 6:00 hour, right? he can't get the back part to be -- brian: tail was too long. ainsley: tail was longer than the front part. steve: so you cut it off. viewer sent in an email, use the tie as pocket square. but it looked kind of funny. i bent it over. look. that is so cool. ainsley: steve, listen, we got so many viewer comments. i didn't even notice brian's tie was too long. now that steve fixed it looks good especially the pocket square. brian: i wouldn't be surprised if everyone across the country are cutting off their ties to make it a pocket square. ainsley: tamara, doing surgery on brian's tie is what "fox & friendses" is all about. friend taking care of friends. brian: this is from brian.
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ainsley: from steve to you. brian: i like that pocket square. could you do that to my tie, brian, from the guy sitting to your write? you write the show. you texted the show. you want me to do this to your tie. steve: i like the pocket square. sit down right here. ainsley: don't cut the microphone, brian. brian: you don't have the problem i have. what i'm going to do. steve: go a little higher. brian: i don't know if we can use this again. ainsley you have to do the angle cuts. ainsley: will you ever wear this again? steve: of course i will. i have had it a couple years. it looks fantastic. brian: if you have a tie, don't have a pocket square, do this.
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send it in. this could capture the nation's imagination. steve: you asked chris to stitch it up, jillian went to her office got her sewing kit. brian: get out of here. chris, put the camera down. come on up. don't worry about it. ainsley: there is yellow and green. we have thread to match both of your ties. jillian: it is in my office. steve: because the frame ends. email us at friend@foxnews.com. griff jenkins is down in the capitol. would you do the same thing with yours. you don't have a pocket square. reporter: here come scissors right now being brought in at this moment. bear with me. ainsley: don't cut your mike. reporter: i have a lot of news to get to involving the house
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and senate. you won't believe what is happening. ainsley: this is more important, with the pocket square. reporter: sort of following your lead? it is tough, down here in d.c., ties are made of steel. got it here. ainsley: there you go. reporter: there we go. how is that? allow me to continue. matter of hours, the doj is expected to meet with the house judiciary committee staff one hour before jerry nadler hopes to hold attorney general william barr in congress. doj spokeswoman says they have taken extraordinary steps to accommodate the committee despite their refusal to meet the minimally redacted report. over in the senate, chairman ron johnson, chuck grassley, calling on the inspector general of the
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intelligence community to investigate media leaks, including texts and emails from former fbi agent peter strzok. remember him? he writes, i think our sisters have begun leaking. they're kicking into over drive in this email from strzok to his colleagues. i'm beginning to think the agency got info a lot earlier than we thought. it hasn't shared it completely with us. might explain all the weird seemingly incorrect leads these media folks have. would also highlight the agency as a source of some of the leaks. chairman johnson had this to say. >> there was no collusion yet agencies of the federal government were leaking stories and creating this huge story. reporter: finally we learned. senate majority leader mitch mcconnell will take to the floor in less than two hours calling on the nation to move on from the russia investigation, using the words, quote, case
quote
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closed. there you go, guys. steve: sounds like the reporting and letters that ron johnson and charles grassley sent sounds like they're suggesting the leaks were from the cia. ainsley: plural, could be intel community. reporter: that's right. if you go on to the senate web page for ron johnson you can read more about the letter. clearly the implication is if the cia will find out. neil: george papdopoulus said he was spied on. that was led by the cia. he wasn't led by the fbi. maybe "the new york times" will write about it. ainsley: on other side society, you look fantastic, griff. steve: pocket square perfectly matches the necktie. reporter: the brilliant resilient mcgaveer kilmeade.
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steve: president presented tiger woods with the medal of freedom since he won the extraordinary masters a couple weeks ago. the president wanted to salute him. he brought his whole family. he has had super highs and super lows and yesterday's event was really something. listen. >> you have seen the good and the bad, the highs and the lows. in '97, yes i won the masters i was there to, i ended up hugging my dad and my mom. my dad is no longer here but my mom's here. i love you mom. i have battled. i tried, i tried to hang in there. i have tried to come back and play the great game of golf again. amazing masters experience that i just had a few weeks ago. certainly this is probably the highlight of what i've
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accomplished so far in my life on the golf course. this is an honor. brian: four back surgeries. he went years without winning a major. he had to pull himself out of so many tournaments. he wasn't supposed to walk again. he had a fusion surgery. had a knee surgery. had the opioid issue. went to rehab, the personal issue the marriage. ainsley: highs and lows. he is definitely humbled. he is not the same guy he was. he has been through a lot. everyone deserves a second chance. seems like he is bad. steve: so appreciative of what happened to him. ainsley: he has a new girlfriend. she was there. his kids were there. his mom was there. his mom straightened the rob bonn around his neck. it was flipped. the president honored his dad. remembered his dad. said earl was a wonderful person. steve: friendship tiger woods
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and donald trump had predates. ainsley: he lives on jupiter island. >> the president lives 20 miles south of tiger's house which is on jupiter island. he was walking down the street went about 20 blocks, when the president was talking about the many accomplishments of tiger woods because there have been so many. here is the president talking about tiger woods, who is a legend. >> we are in the presence of a true legend. an extraordinary athlete who transformed golf and achieved new levels of dominance. he is also a great person. tiger we are inspired by everything you have become and attained. the job you have done is incredible. your spectacular achievements on the gulf course. your triumph over physical adversity, your relentless will to win, win, win. these quality embody the american spirit. we can't wait to see what's
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next, tiger. brian: jack nicklaus poster and say i'm going to beat jack nicklaus for all time majors. jack is pulling for him to beat his records. for the longest time for eight years he is stuck. now it is 18-15. now the u.s. open at bethpage. he won it the last time he played it. he will be there at long island. his yacht already arrived. hardest thing when we travel is get the yacht hear ahead of time. ainsley: jack nicklaus, arnold palmer, charlie sifford, first african-american to join the pga. he named his son charlie after charlie sifford. he has been like a grand father. steve: we have asked for your comments. we have all sorts on facebook and email. it is 8:11 in new york city. jillian joins with us a fox news alert.
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jillian: let's get you caught up on the story we're following with a fox news alert. a suspected cop killer actually seen smiling after his arrest in mississippi overnight. 19-year-old darian atkinson accused of gunning down biloxi police officer, robert mckeithen. where the 23 year veteran of force was ambushed. >> these officers have been up for 38, 40, 44 hours. we thought it fitting for them to be here and see the arrest that they worked so hard to try to effect. jillian: mckeithen was planning to retire at the end. year. he leaves behind a wife and four kids. he is the 16th police officer killed this year. a planned meeting between secretary of state mike pompeo and angela merkel was canceled.
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pompeo was set to meet with merkel in berlin. that meeting has to be canceled because of quote, pressing issues. they did not elaborate. we don't know where pompeo is heading now. he was meeting with the arctic council in finland. owner of the maximum security is suing the kentucky horse racing commission after it denied his appeal. the horse was disqualified after race officials said it cut off other horses. the commission says all the decisions are final. maximum security will not race in the preakness next week. social media going wild over the newest edition to the royal family. the duchess of sussex, meghan and prince harry announcing the birth of their son but not revealing his name. the top name circling online for baby sussex, are alexander, robert and arthur. baby sussex is the 7th to the thrown. has the first to become brittish
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monarch or president of the united states. interesting to see what the baby's home. brian: full of ture lens or uphill, will not get any good schools or good jobs. i hope for the best. steve: congratulations to the happy couple. >> i can't wait to find out what the name is going to be. brian: neither can i. ainsley: president trump pardoning a former army ranger suspected of killing a al qaeda terrorist. he claims it was self-defense. brian: pete hegseth reacts to the decision. steve: good morning. ♪
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♪ brian: president trump is issuing a full pardon to a former u.s. army ranger convicted of killing a suspected al qaeda terrorist in iraq in 2018. first lieutenant michael behana claimed it was self-defense. prosecutors argued it was retaliation for the deaths of two american soldiers the white house saying u.s. highest appellate court noted concern how the trial court handled his claims on self-defense.
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while serving his sentence, mr. behenna was a model prisoner. steve: we have "fox and friends weekend" co-host pete hegseth. he was serving a sentence but ultimately paroled. >> the president wiped his slate clean. i followed this case. i'm familiar with it. he was in the 100 first. he was in iraq. two of his guys were killed in a mrap. they found the bomb-maker, detained him. we talk bull at other cases. he was released, iraqi bomb-maker was released two weeks later. they knew it was the guy that killed two americans. they didn't have enough evidence. we do csi on the battlefield. he was told to bring the bomb-maker back to his house. on the way there they stopped to interrogate him themselves. stripped him down, took off his clothes, held a gun to his head, we'll kill you if you don't tell other people who worked with you. ultimately they cut his handcuffs off. what happened, it is all marcky
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but apparently the iraqi tried to reach for his gun and ultimately the lieutenant pulled historyinger. non-premeditated murder he was charged with. ultimately this was a platoon leader trying to keep his guys safe. killing someone we know who killed americans. brian: who was a terrorist. >> he was a terrorist. he shouldn't serve anytime in prison. hess slate is wiped clean. he can vote. tell his story. enjoy the freedom. ainsley: why was he convicted then? wouldn't that be self-defense? >> that was his defense in the court was self-defense. not just of him but his entire platoon ultimately in that moment. the army over prosecutes. brian: with the motorcycle. >> with the motorcyclest coming toward his platoon. someone was killed by a motorcycle suicide bomber. he made a tough call. he is in jail for almost 20 years. he is still in jail. that is a case i know the president is looking at.
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eddie gallagher's case. matt behnaa could be have been me or anybody. the rules of engagement are tying hands of our warfighters. ainsley: tying into his prison reform. the president has power to pardon. alice johnson, didn't serve in the military. non-violent first time offense. >> look at previous administration. bradley manning is let free. in this administration warfighters. this is beginning of more to come. brian: you train them to win a war. you want to put the, you want to put the handcuffs on and don't allow them to do it. >> because they're not killing enemy in the right way. killing compassionately. ainsley: like a pocket square. >> i hear the cool kids are doing it. in the green room i took it upon myself to make a modification.
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steve: it matches. it is very night. >> it is cut. yeah. ainsley: there you go. >> thank you for the trend, brian. steve: thank you very much. >> thank you guys. >> kellyanne conway coming up. we have to be able to repair the enamel on a daily basis. with the new pronamel repair toothpaste more minerals enter deep into the enamel surface. you have an opportunity to repair what's already been damaged. it 's amazing. what's already been damaged. ♪ when you have nausea, ♪ heartburn, ♪ indigestion,
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♪ ainsley: here are some quick headlines for you. a manhunt is underway after teenagers make a jailbreak straight out of a hollywood movie. look at picture. it shows the bedsheets they turned into a rope to climb out after window at colorado detention center. they flipped over a dumpster, jumped the fence before the getaway driver picks them up. they are considered dangerous sex offenders and they have gang ties. indian? sheriff's office urging them to fill out the form. it reads, attention drug
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dealers. let us take away your financial dealers the dealers are encouraged to write down where their rivals live and drugs they sell before sending the form back to authorities. brian. brian: 24 after the hour. bernie sanders thinks every convicted felon behind bars have the right to vote. he is popular with college kids. what do they think. we went to find out. your answers are surprise you. >> i think they should be able to vote from prison. >> i think they should. they should be allowed to do what. >> i don't think people in jail have the right to vote. they put themselves in there. >> when you get out serve your time, why not. while you're still in jail, then, sorry. brian: like a true yankee fan. cabot phillips, media director for campusreform.org. cabot, that is interesting question. that is not a hard one. they shouldn't have the right to vote in prison. steve: absolutely in this day and age, we convinced young
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people if a law makes you feel uncomfortable, it is not compassionate, you shouldn't have it at all. when you break down the concept of rule of law, you see people willing to do this. the billion line, when you break the law you temporarily forfeit the right to make the laws. listen what i asked students if they wanted votes if they're incarcerated. should they have to forfeit second amendments. >> people in prison don't have second moment rate to firearms. why should they have voting rights? >> i'm not sure. >> that's a great question. um, i think, because vote something like something super important. >> do you think should lose other rights like second amendment rights. >> no. >> even in prison? >> no. they're people. like sure they did stuff wrong. >> but they would be bringing in a gun in prison? >> i don't think, second amendment, what am i thinking. yeah, forget that.
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>> so the idea essentially that you should never lose any of your rights because you're an american. that is not how our laws work. in america if you break the law you do forfeit the right to certain laws. we've seen leadership institutes campus reform, repeatedly, teachers, professors, social media the whole broken down the idea of rule of law, the importance of strong laws in favor of political correctness. i think that is one reason we see this by this same logic there is a prison in louisiana, has 7,000 inmates. the town the inmates are in have 10,000 citizens. should the 7,000 people have a say who is sheriff of small town there? people can look at logic that is flawed. if you only feel like following laws that make you feel good you will likely ignore rule of law. brian: there is a covenant. you have to keep your side of the bargain, society has to keep theirs. if you blow it, lose your freedom, go to jail, you lose the second amendment. people using the word logic.
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the word logic seems to have no role on campus. it is idealism. >> many students it is about the social pressure. if you come out in support of strong laws, not just on prison voting laws, same thing with immigration. if you support criminals, support loosening immigration laws, allowing everyone, illegally right here on college, you're called compassionate, hailed a hero. same thing for giving voting rights who already broken prison, are in prison. i think that social pressure play as large role. so many people are willing to ignore logic, ignore what the made the country great, rule of law, common law, the social contract you mentioned. that is one reason we see this. it will be interesting to see how it plays out in 2020 with other candidates with that mind set. brian: mayor pete says america was never that great. we have to amend that statement. cabot, thank you so much. >> appreciate it, brian. brian: president trump set to meet with republican senators today at the white house to discuss his new immigration
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♪ steve: beautiful day in other nation's capital. not far from the front facade at the north lawn. kellyanne conway, counselor to the president is standing by. she joins us live. good morning to you. beautiful day. >> it is gorgeous. come and visit. steve: thank you. you have folks coming to visit in the white house. i know a number of republican senators have been invited to
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hear details about the president's new immigration plan that jared kushner has been working on. what can you tell us about it? >> we're delighted they're coming to the white house. just as we were very happy 12 democrats from the senate and house came last week to talk about infrastructure. that is what we work on here. this president continues to make great progress and strides on the major public policy issues of the day. why his gallup approval rating of all-time high, 46%, two points higher than president obama's at this point in his presidency in april of 2011. he went on for re-election. jared kushner and others have been working assiduously for a while on a big immigration package. obviously border security is top of mind for this president. i took note, great note that since january, democrats have now 17 points more likely to refer to what is happening at the southern border a quote crisis is. remember it was in january that schumer and pelosi went on prime-time television following the president's oval office address said this is a
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manufactured crisis. people in their own party increasingly think they believe what they see. that we have a true crisis is. border security top of mind but also the president will be considering the merit-based immigration system. the president put together a 70-point plan, submitted it to congress in october of 2017. anybody that seems surprised that the president wants to end visa lottery system, end chain migration, have married based immigration system, deal with daca as he can a -- brian: that is on the table. daca will be on the table? >> it could be. i don't want to get ahead of it but it could be. obviously the president was willing to make a deal on that in the cabinet room of 2018 the democrats walked away from the table. they pretended 35 or 25 million for border security was real. difference between allocation and appropriation and they knew it. ainsley: how will he get this passed though? democrats are completely against this, they control the house? >> they have to stop pretending
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they want to reform the immigration laws. right now we have a couple of judges across this country in charge of the nation's immigration laws. that just can't be. we're all coequal branches of government. if you have a few judges out there giving us things like the flores decision and congress refuses to fix flores. they refuse to fix it. bpra which allows kids to be smuggled and recycled. there was a story yesterday that someone paid $130 for a boy to grab his hand, come over with him. they know, they admit an adult knows, adult male certainly knows if you grab the hand of a minor boy or girl you have a better chance getting into the country. these children are being recycled. a story yesterday, guatemalan boy, 8 years old put back on a plane and recycled. that has to stop. congress can change that by fixing the tbpra or the flores decision and they refuse to act. all that is coming to them.
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if they're serious about immigration reform they should come to the table and fix something. same thing with infrastructure and drug pricing. these wildly bipartisan issues are starving for support. this president will meet with anyone. they can come anytime. you saw that last week at the infrastructure meeting. steve: some republicans are, senators are going to come to the white house to talk women my graduation. a couple of republican senators sent a letter to the inspector general of the intel community essentially saying hey, we know you're looking into the fisa abuses but are you looking into these leaks from the intel community to members of the press? because, and if you're not, why aren't you? >> that's that's a great question. obviously the press has a big ol' insatiable appetite for investigations. we just went through two years of one that cost taxpayers $30 million. it should be seen as definitive, authoritative, exhaustive,
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investigation, called the mueller report. 448 pages long. it has been released to the public for quite a while. let's see where this all started. what is everybody afraid off? what do you have to hide? where did this all start. it i important to do that. bill barr the attorney general made clear that perhaps there is an investigation to at least aid these leaks but i for one as citizen of this country i want to know if intelligence officers were leaking information to the press. why not? we have to see hot leakers were. and the leakees. i think a few of them look a little nervous. ainsley: who do you think they are? if you read the latest text message from strzok to page, december 2016, but it was just released i think our sisters have begun leaking like mad, scorned and political, they're kicking into over drive. he worked and lisa worked for fbi who are the sisters? people in the cia or others in the intel community? >> ainsley i don't know. i'm willing to find out. they can't have it both ways.
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people say it is over, why are we looking at that. they want to continue to have the investigation subpoenas, contempt hearings and all the nonsense that attends to it. they can't have it both ways. we have spend $25 million, wait two years to investigate. brian: but i do have hope, i do have hope, friday "the new york times" picked up a story we're covering for 18 months. >> there you go. >> they are reallying this story they will be left behind unless they join in. will the president go out of his wray to actually block bob mueller coming up in may or june and testifying? or would he just rather don't? where does it stan right now? >> well the president said he should not testify. i know a lot of people read the word block in there, which i didn't sea. he should not testify. his point is very simple. bob mueller's report and investigation is definitive and conclusive. as mitch mcconnell is going to say, our majority leader in the house or senate will say later today, case closed.
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putin and russians see us still arguing about russian interference in election that did not exist. sure interference existed right but read the whole mueller report. read volume -- brian: he won't block him, he won't block him but he rather don't? >> he is saying bob mueller has already spoken. this investigation -- brian: i agree. >> well, he also saying what is there left to say? what is there left to do? the fact is that mr. mueller if mr. mueller could have, director mueller could have referred for indictment. he could have charged people with a crime including president, president's family, president's advisors, president's associates he would have done so. the job of prosecutor is not to use the word exoneration. decline referral of an indictment. that word didn't even need to be used. what else would mr. mueller add to this? i think democrats, they can do what they want. they look really ridiculous still investigating an investigation that's over. steve: kellyanne, you're on the
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north lawn. on the other side of west wing is is the rose garden. in a rare late afternoon, early evening ceremony the president presented the medal of freedom to tiger woods, talked about, you know his highs and lows and an amazing career. we were curious about your reaction to a baltimore sun headline, they write, plenty of athletes refusing to stand with trump. not tiger woods. then on the op-ed page we wish mr. woods would have taken a stand against hatred and declined the award given the racial ethnic rift mr.. part of his legacy will embrace a man who incited bigotry and racism is it. >> legacy will include the presidential mad dal of freedom. it has been could conferred and president trump and on a number of athletes. in fact a couple of months ago,
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the president conferred it on seven americans including roger staubach, former quarterback of the dallas cowboys who has been a great charitable member, civic is, civic-minded generous benefactor in his community. alan paige who was a distinguished athlete. brian: judge. >> african-american judge in minnesota i believe. brian: what about the backlash? >> that come, listen who cares. honestly respectfully who cares what the baltimore sun is has to say about tiger woods and the president in the rose garden yesterday and here's why. they find negative and invective in even the grit and determination and overcoming injury and personal challenges and age over time and tiger woods is a great american story of grit and determination and the underdog prevailing again. you know leave it to some who are honestly always in a bad
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mood about something to try to ruin the day for tiger woods. i don't think that tiger woods will allow that we're certainly not going to allow that here at the white house. he was more than happy to accept that award. many people are, the president will continue to distinguish a great american for their contributions to society in many ways. brian: steve: kellyanne conway, north lawn. >> rose garden, one anniversary of be the best. first lady's incredible platform. she has three pillars, pushing them forward. tremendous progress on all three pillars. particularly one i'm privileged to work on with her the opioid crisis is. this first lady raised awareness and funding and action on neonatal 150 babies born every day in this country struggling for the first breath. through the crib act we're helping moms and newborns stay together. she is addicted, the baby is born chemically dependent. more and more thriving and
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surviving. due in part to the first lady's efforts. steve: an important program. we'll cover it live. ainsley: thanks, kellyanne. steve: meanwhile, 18 minutes before the top of the hour. ainsley: georgia's governor set to sign the nation's "heartbeat bill." one of the bill's sponsors, a mother of four, says unborn babies are people worth of protection. she joins us live next. get more by adding one a day. it's the #1 multivitamin uniquely designed for men and women. one serving, once a day. one a day. and done.
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♪ ainsley: georgia's governor expected to sign the state's "heartbeat bill" which would ban abortions after a heartbeat is detected which is usually around six weeks. here with the latest one of the bill's cosponsors, georgia state representative jinni earhardt. good to see you. >> good morning. ainsley: same last name. different dads, right. you have four kids, right? >> i do. i have actually, my husband and
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i have six together. ainsley: whoa. >> one grandbaby, another one on the way. ainsley: congratulations. i know your house is so much fun especially the holidays. is that why you wanted to cosponsor the bill. >> it is. that and number of reasons as well. this is a pivotal day for georgia. today in georgia, governor brian kemp will sign the "heartbeat bill," hb 41 which i was a cosponsor. we're thrilled and honor. i can't tell you how excited i am to be a part of this. it is exciting day for georgia families and for the precious unborn babies. i have to tell you i'm honored and proud to be a part of it. ainsley: what is the difference in this law than what you had in the state of georgia? >> right. essentially what it changes a couple things. changes the gestational age that the babies are protected. current abortion law says abortion is not allowed after 20
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weeks. this allows the protection of babies once a human heartbeat is detected by medical professional. that could be anywhere six to eight weeks, depending on the method used for that detection. an important distinction of the bill, ainsley, provides for the personhood. it establish as personhood at the point that human heartbeat is eteched. of course at which time the 14th amendment write as protection for that person goes into effect this makes it different from other bills as well. it will go into effect january 1st. and we're just, we're thrilled. we're thrilled this day has arrived. ainsley: hollywood and other organizations, aclu, they're not in favor of this but it is going to be signed today. we'll be watching this morning. congratulations. >> thank you so much. ainsley: you're welcome. have a good one. school is almost out. which means it is almost time for summer camp. what you need to give your kids the best summer.
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that is up next. first bill hemmer at top of the hour. >> fort scott. what was yours. ainsley: greystone and kanuga. >> what grade. ainsley: fourth and fifth. time of my life. >> i liked it for the first two hours. i was home sick. i got over it. we had an awesome summer. nice to see you, ainsley. ainsley: nice to see you. >> democrats have a clear front-runner. we'll talk to the rnc how you take that on. what is iran up to with some american troops in the region? we shall explore. the white house is now in a battle royale with house democrats. the latest shot fired in this matter. we'll see you in ten minutes, guys, top of the hour right here. of all time. lease the 2019 rx 350 for $399 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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♪ steve: the warmer weather finally here. it is time to start thinking about summer camp if you have kids. here with advice the president of christian camp and conference association greg hunter. we have tommy seoul with word of life youth camps. sean murray, former american ninja warrior. we'll find out how that fifths together. you run the association. you have all these camps. why should people think about camp for kids this summer? >> it is own not a secret if kids only average four minutes outside it could lead to depression. a university of oklahoma, kids hope increases. a week of camp can be more than fun and games. it can actually change a kissed's live. steve: we have kids over here. they're doing arts and crafts. you have the rock wall which is very important.
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so, tommy, to his point about kids, you know they don't ever put down their phones these days. >> right. steve: so it is great they can go outside, to have some fun? >> that is huge part of camp is the activities. but it is about conquering new things. like our ninja warrior course. kisseds can conquer something they haven't done before. it builds incredible confidence in them. we have seen that change kids over the course of a week. steve: sean, to the point about the ninja course, is that what we have right here? >> this is a great entry into it. some people look at things, say i can't do that. there is something you can do. we can show you the first step, to get into it. steve: we're watching some of these kids do it. would you like to show us how you do it? >> yeah, sure. steve: okay, get going. >> all right. here is going up the wall. steve: oh, i could do that. >> of course it feels good to be up on top.
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there is different ways to get down. you've to the different aspects you can get into on the course. steve: he is making all of us look pretty bad. steve: that is awesome. this is incorporated in your camp. >> yeah, sean built a course. i saw sean's course. we copied the plans, put it right on our camp. steve: i love the fact that during the summer the kids, they're trying to get out of the routine they have got during the school year. why not go to camp? it is something you will talk about for the rest of your life. providing you can afford it. you have the time for your family, why not? >> we believe camp can truly change a kid's life. they say that was the best week of my life. steve: it is christian camp and conference. how big is religion at camp? >> well, in our camps it's pivotal because we believe that we will help the kid grow
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spiritually, physically, emotionally as well. in our camps there is spiritual faith component. steve: these kids are having so much fun, ainsley. jillian are right now. awesome. thank you very much. guys. >> thank you. steve: more "fox & friends" in a minute. ♪ >> tech: at safelite autoglass, we know sooner or later... every chip will crack. this daughter was home visiting when mom saw a chip in her windshield. >> mom: honey is that a chip? >> tech: they wanted it fixed fast so they brought it to us. >> mom: hi. >> tech: with our in-shop chip repair service, we can fix it the same day... guaranteed. plus with most insurance a safelite chip repair is no cost to you. >> mom: really? drive safely. all right. ♪ acoustic music >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, ♪ safelite replace.
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stop fearing your alarm clock... with zzzquil pure zzzs. a drug-free blend of botanicals with melatonin that supports your natural sleep cycle so you can seize the morning. zzzquil pure zzzs. >> pete hegseth scaling the wall here. >> good job. >> don't fall, you'll ruin the whole summer. >> fancy shoes, look at that. >> remember, if you have
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vacation time and not a kid, take it and go to camp. >> ring that bell. >> good job! >> bill: that's an active morning on fox square. top republicans following through on their push to investigate the obama-era investigators as we learn of potential new evidence that multiple individuals were leaking to the media as we say good morning. i'm bill hemmer live in new york city. if you prove this and prosecute it you could go to jail. how are you doing? >> julie: no pressure at all. i'm in for sandra smith. i'm julie banderas. it comes back to the fateful messages from strzok. they could indicate leaks from the highest level of the obama administration. >> bill: all that coming as the house judiciary committee continues their push to hold

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